Substorm

Substorm
A series of images made by ultraviolet light imager on the THEMIS spacecraft showing the aurora and Earth's upper atmosphere. The glowing side is the atmosphere lit up by the Sun's light energy and the oval of light is the aurora. During a substorm the auroral oval brightens in a localized area and then suddenly breaks into many different forms that expand both toward Earth's pole and equator. This is exactly what Shun-ichi Akasofu (1964) drew in his auroral substorm illustration.

A substorm, sometimes referred to as a magnetospheric substorm or an auroral substorm, is a brief disturbance in the Earth's magnetosphere that causes energy to be released from the "tail" of the magnetosphere and injected into the high latitude ionosphere. Visually, a substorm is seen as a sudden brightening and increased movement of auroral arcs. Substorms were first described by the Norwegian scientist Kristian Birkeland[1] which he called polar elementary storms. Sydney Chapman used the term substorm about 1960 which is now the standard term. The morphology of a substorm was first described by Japanese geophysicist Syun-Ichi Akasofu in 1964[2][3] using data collected during the International Geophysical Year.

Substorms[4] are distinct from geomagnetic storms in that the latter take place over a period of several days, are observable from anywhere on Earth, inject a large number of ions into the outer radiation belt, and occur once or twice a month during the maximum of the solar cycle and a few times a year during solar minimum. Substorms, on the other hand, take place over a period of a few hours, are observable primarily at the polar regions, do not inject many particles into the radiation belt, and are relatively frequent—often occurring only a few hours apart from each other. Substorm occurrence becomes more frequent during a geomagnetic storm when one substorm may start before the previous one has completed. The source of the magnetic disturbances observed at the Earth's surface during geomagnetic storms is the ring current, whereas the sources of magnetic disturbances observed on the ground during substorms are electric currents in the ionosphere at high latitudes.[5]

Substorms can cause magnetic field disturbances in the auroral zones up to a magnitude of 1000 nT, roughly 2% of the total magnetic field strength in that region. The disturbance is much greater in space, as some geosynchronous satellites have registered the magnetic field dropping to half of its normal strength during a substorm. The most visible indication of a substorm is an increase in the intensity and size of polar auroras.[5] Substorms occur roughly six times per day, though they are more intense and more frequent during a geomagnetic storm. They are divided into three phases: the growth phase, the expansion phase, and the recovery phase.[6]

Notes

  1. ^ Birkeland, Kristian (1908 (section 1), 1913 (section 2)). The Norwegian Aurora Polaris Expedition 1902-1903. New York: Christiania (Oslo): H. Aschehoug & Co.. pp. 720. http://www.archive.org/details/norwegianaurorap01chririch.  out-of-print, full text online
  2. ^ Sarris, T. and Li, X. (30 March 2005). "Evolution of the dispersionless injection boundary associated with substorms". Annales Geophysicae 23: 877–884. http://lasp.colorado.edu/~lix/paper/AG/Sarris.Li.AG05.pdf. 
  3. ^ Akasofu, S.-I. (April 1964). "The development of the auroral substorm". Planetary and Space Science 12 (4): 273–282. doi:10.1016/0032-0633(64)90151-5. 
  4. ^ Potemra, T. (1991). Magnetospheric Substorms. Washington, D.C.: Am. Geophysical Union. pp. 488. ISBN 0-87590-030-5. 
  5. ^ a b Stern, David P. and Peredo, Mauricio (25 November 2001). "Substorms". http://www.phy6.org/Education/wsubstrm.html. Retrieved 21 March 2010. 
  6. ^ "Substorm". Southwest Research Institute. http://pluto.space.swri.edu/image/glossary/substorm.html. Retrieved 24 March 2010. 

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